The problem is (for API) that most Americans don’t agree with big oil and other polluters on this. In fact, poll after poll shows that the public strongly supports the enforcers of our clean air laws and wants polluters held accountable.

And since the US Environmental Protection Agency is moving forward to hold polluters accountable for toxic pollution, air quality in America’s cities and global warming pollution, API is worried. So API has come out against proposals to reduce ground-level ozone (or smog), toxic air pollution from industrial plants and global warming pollution, saying essentially (and I’m paraphrasing hundreds of pages of detailed comments) that its too expensive to be worth the cost. To them.

And, as I mentioned earlier this week, reducing toxic pollution from industrial plants would save as many as 5,000 lives and prevent 250,000 lost workdays in the first year of implementation alone.

But polluters would rather put their money elsewhere. Which is why API is relying on creating the appearance of public support. By making their lobbyists organize rallies and then busing oil company employees to them. Check out this video which plainly shows API rally attendees — dressed in their red t-shirt uniforms — being bused in together and then marched into the seating area in precise military drill team-style rows.

In fact, this whole campaign is so regimented that it’s right out of that old political joke: The spontaneous rally will start at precisely 1:45 p.m. … be there, or else”¦

No kidding. As the Akron Beacon Journal noted of an API rally held in Canton, Ohio earlier this month in an article whose subhead read “Some say they were forced to attend”:

Attendees told the Akron Beacon Journal that while speakers lamented the loss of U.S. jobs, they distributed T-shirts made in Mexico and Honduras.

And the goodie bag that contained the shirts was made in China.

Many, if not most, of the 400 participants were delivered in motor coaches from local oil and gas industry companies. One oil and gas industry employee who did not want to be identified for fear of discipline at work said he and co-workers had no choice but to attend. (emphasis added)

API’s approach of dressing up their agenda as a popular one goes back a ways. Back in 2009, API ran full-page ads in beltway publications attacking Congress for “new energy taxes.” But as Think Progress pointed out at the time, the “real people” featured in the ads were stock photos from Getty Images.

To go with their faux people and faux rallies, API is also bankrolling reports with faux numbers that support their claims that protecting public health is too costly.

All this because they want to undercut the Clean Air Act by blocking implementation of clean air rules that would (Check out my earlier blog on API’s attack on tightening smog standards.)

If there’s a “tax” here it’s the burden that Big Oil puts on the health of Americans. But don’t expect API to be out there warning you about that tax any time soon “¦ and please help us urge Congress to hold polluters accountable by taking action today.